Delirium Flashcards

1
Q

What is delirium?

A

Disturbance in attention and change in cognition

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2
Q

How long does it take for delirium to develop?

A

Develops over short period of time (hours-days) and tends to fluctuate during the day

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3
Q

How common is delirium?

A

15-60% of older people experience delirium prior to or during hospital admission = diagnosis missed in up to 70%

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4
Q

What is the mortality associated with delirium?

A

10-26% in patients admitted with delirium

22-76% in patients who develop delirium in hospital = high death rate in months following discharge

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5
Q

What outcomes is delirium associated with?

A

Increased mortality, prolonged hospital stay, increased complications, increased cost, long term disability

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6
Q

What are the hallmarks of delirium?

A

Acute change from baseline function
Impaired attention and altered level of consciousness
Fluctuating course

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7
Q

What are the types of delirium?

A

30% have hyperactive delirium
50% have hypoactive delirium
20% have mixed type

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8
Q

What type of delirium is associated with worse outcomes?

A

Hypoactive delirium

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9
Q

How do the types of delirium vary from each other?

A
Hyper = agitated, aggressive, wandering, easy to diagnose
Hypo = withdrawn, apathetic, sleepy/coma, often missed
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10
Q

How accurate is the 4AT tool for diagnosing delirium?

A

89.7% sensitivity and 84.1% specificity

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11
Q

What are the categories of the 4AT?

A

Alertness = scored 0 or 4
AMT4 = scored 0-2
Attention = scored 0-2
Acute/fluctuating course = scored 0 or 4

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12
Q

What does the score a patient gets on the 4AT indicate?

A

Score 1-3 = possible cognitive impairment

Score >= 4 = delirium +/- cognitive impairment

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13
Q

What is assessed under the alertness category of the 4AT?

A

Includes patients who are markedly drowsy or agitated = observe if asleep and attempt to wake, ask patient name and address

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14
Q

What do you ask a patient about when carrying out the AMT4 part of the 4AT?

A

Ask them their age, DOB, location and what the current year is

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15
Q

How is a patient’s attention assessed using the 4AT?

A

Ask the patient to state the months of the years backwards starting from December

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16
Q

How is a patient assessed for an acute/fluctuating course of symptoms using the 4AT?

A

Presence of acute changes or fluctuation in functioning arising over last fortnight and still evident in last 24 hours

17
Q

What is needed to diagnose delirium using the Confusion assessment method?

A

Diagnosis requires presence of features 1,2 and either 3 or 4

18
Q

What are the features listed under the Confusion assessment method?

A
1 = acute onset and fluctuating course
2 = inattention
3 = disorganised thinking
4 = altered level of consciousness
19
Q

How should the environment be changed to help manage a patient with delirium?

A

Quiet and calm, low night lighting, clearly visible clocks and calendars, familiar people, bed as low as possible

20
Q

What is the management of patients with delirium?

A

Identify and reverse all underlying causes
Try and restore normal sleep pattern
Assess for urinary retention and constipation

21
Q

What investigations are done for delirium?

A

Start fluid balance chart, ECG, bloods, may do culture if signs of infection

22
Q

What are some general measures that help when managing patients with delirium?

A

Approach patient calmly and gently from the front
Maintain daytime wakefulness with activities
Allow patients to mobilise as much as possible
Ensure glasses and hearing aids are working

23
Q

What are some common components of delirium prevention programmes?

A

Anaesthesia protocols, assessment of bladder/bowel functions, early mobilisation, extra nutrition, geriatric consultation, hydration, medication review, pain management, sleep enhancement, therapeutic cognitive activities

24
Q

When can sedation be used on a patient with delirium?

A

Only when they are a danger to themselves or others = must document reasons for giving sedation

25
Q

What medication may be used to treat delirium?

A

1st line = haloperidol

2nd line = benzodiazepines

26
Q

What are the benefits of haloperidol?

A

High potency with few anticholinergic side effects and no active metabolites

27
Q

How is haloperidol prescribed to treat delirium?

A

Start with low dose = 0.25-0.5mg
Maximum of 5mg can be given in 24 hours
Give orally = avoid IM if at all possible

28
Q

What patients are unsuitable for treatment with haloperidol?

A

Avoid in Parkinson’s disease and lewy body dementia

29
Q

What patients are treated with benzodiazepines?

A

Alcohol/benzodiazepine withdrawal or seizures

Haloperidol contraindicated

30
Q

What is the first choice benzodiazepine used to treat delirium?

A

Lorazepam = shorter acting and fewer active metabolites

May worsen delirium

31
Q

What are some causes of delirium?

A

Drugs, electrolyte disturbance, drug withdrawal, infection, reduced sensory input, pain, stroke, subdural haemorrhage, urinary incontinence, constipation, metabolic

32
Q

How is delirium screened for?

A

All patients >65 should be screened for delirium on admission to hospital

33
Q

What is the first line medication for delirium in patients with Parkinson’s disease or lewy body dementia?

A

Lorazepam 500mcg-1mg oral